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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1904)
THE OMAITA ILLUSTRATED REE. For and About the Women Folks w D'Oylr Carte. She has a soprano vole of nail-tnakJns, are apt to provoke a smile. excellent ranee and sjrmpaUietio quality Investigation nuule by reliable Inspectors and hrr one desire Is to bring; It to greater enow that a considerable number of Kngllsh perfection. Her capacity for work ssema women, particularly in tho Staffordshire endlwa and her love of music la as much Mil. are engaged in employment of thli furnishes a precedent of great of an Incentive aa the money which she character, and, what la perhaps stranger, value to the sex. The hernlna In the case hone in brlner Into the family nurse. It ia sm to prefer thia class or worn to the Is a widow, called In aa a witness. extremely difficult to get a hearing on the diudgjery of factory life or demestlo service "Will you tell the truth, the whole truth. . concert stage In London, where only tho and even to needle work. While It aeema to he Wu of A(f, HEN woman wills she will find a way to evade telling her exact age. An Instance happened In a New York court recently which precedent of well known artists are Invited to sing, but through the Influence of the friends of the American author his daughter will have every opportunity to make the success which her friends anticipate. The- American Hatband. An extraordinary reason for separation from her husband waa that given by a Colorado woman In applying to the courla. It was. that her husband, by his unvarying obedience, made life too monotonous for her. While the statement Is doubtless sub ject to some discount on the score of the reporter's imagination, it recalls the famil iar criticism of foreigners that the average American husband Is "too good" to hla wife. In English households St. Paul's sterling words on the subject are still quoted with approval, and the elimination of "obey" from th marriage aervloe has not even been suggested. There Is a saying abroad that to tell the nationality of a couple one has only to observe them enter- and nothing but the truth?" aaked the com nUflnloner, as he .wound up the ceremony of administering the oath to ber. "Why, how funny I Of course I'll tell the truth. Does anyone here have any Idea that I'll do anything elae? Thla Is awfully funny." "Then," said the commissioner, "tell the court your residence, age and occupation." "No, certainly, I will not tell my age." "Dut you have been sworn and you must answer all the questions put to you," said the. commlArtoner. "Well, I'll not tell you my age; that's certain. I read In the papers the other day that a Kansas court hud decided that all a woman had to tell when she wanted to vote was that she was 21 plus, and I will admit that I can vote." The commissioner held the witness an swered satisfactorily and the' case pro ceeded. - i Housekeepers Who Vote. One never realises the true dignity of the Ing a hotel dining room, writes Robert household queen as much as when she has Webster Jones in ths Housekeeper. If the Lapeer county," Michigan, is an InteresUng proved, her ability to shine In a somewhat man precedes the woman they are Anglian; young woman. Though handsome and tal wlder sphere, without deviating from her If the woman precedes the man they sre ented, she prefers the work of men to true vocation, and every one of the dismal French; but if they walk side by side they prophecies as to the general ruin of the ere American. The saying aptly Illustrates homes In the equal-suffrage Mates, that the truth that nowhere Is there greater an American to be work totally unfitted for women, the actual facts do not themselves show this, conclusively. The women, as a. rule, according to a re port made at the sanitary congress Just held at Glasgow, keep in good health and spirits and appear "younger for their age" than factory workers. The work Is usually done at a small forge set up In the yards of their homes and the premises, for the most part, are kept in a clean, sanitary condi tion. Infinitely preferable to the average English workshop. The death rate Is one of the lovi.-t In England. With regard to themselves, the women claim they can regulate the amount oC work they do according to their strength or convenience. By law they are prohibited trom using hammers above a certain pre scribed weight, which has the effect of lim iting the character of work they can do to the lighter kinds. Rons m Big Farm. MJsa Maud Stratton, "the girl farmer of was sure to follow woman's ballot, seems equality of sexes than In this country- In to have failed of verification. To Mrs, Helen M. Warren, the deceased wife of the senior senator from Wyoming, was given the honor of casting the first ballot for a. Unjted States president ever polled by a woman, writes Margaret Sulli van Burks In the Housekeeper. Mrs. War dividual tyrants, both masculine and femi nine, there may be, but on the whole men and women have come to an understanding that each has a particular work to do and Is not subject, as a sex, to the authority of the other. If, as a type, the American husband pos- ren waa a notable housekeeper, ana ner uuo mun mu vumiii-uuuo man n- home was one of the handsomest and best other, it Is hie tendency to become absorbed kept In the country Because It received her In business to the exclusion of hi domestic personal attention. And she found time, also, to supervise the education of her son and daughter. Mrs. Ida Harris Monjell of Wyoming Is oe of the daintiest little house mothers, be cause In her abode the "homey" quality ia so Intermingled with the artistic that it be comes a perfect union of comfort and beauty, a result not often attained. She has two children, a small daughter and an infant son, and It Is quite certain that their cradles will not be neglected, even on elec tion day. Mrs Josephine Hogg of Colorado Is a member of the Pi Beta Phi society, and quite up to date on most of the questions of the day, political or otherwise; but she would be amazed If anyone should hint to her that Intelligence In any shape could be come a handicap to woman In her domestlo duties, or be used as an excuse fop neglect ing them. Mrs. Betty Bell of Colorado and Mrs. Rose Sutherland of Utah were superintend ing the education of their daughters while their husband were serving in congress; life. A business man In one of George Ade' fables says that he provides the cash while his wife provides "culture enough for two." It is a tendency which should be combated. The American husband Is made for better things. That he is "good" to his wife we admit But, in the highest sense, Is he "good" to himself? Hill Owner and Manager. ' On the Perklomen river, in the eastern purt of Pennsylvania, is an old flour mill, which has stood and braved the storms for more than a century. The mill la a structure such as Is rarely encountered at thu present time. Its achl tecture belongs to ths revolutionary times, and, as far as hlstcn-y goes, this mill is not lacking, as the rugged mill stones within were used to turn out the flour fqr Wash ington's army at Valley Forge. However, the fame of this ancient mill does not rest on its age, or its many his torical associations, but on the fact that an 13-year-old girl Is its manager. She is known in her Immediate home cir cle as Miss Sallie R. Trelchler, and as such the less strenuous duties of her own sex, and works ten hours each day in manag ing the affairs of a 200-acre farm. Each spring Miss Stratton, who Is only 19, abandons the gayietles of the winter season and, despite the expostulations of her parents and city friends, buries her self on her farm and from the first plowing until the crops are gathered does a man's work each day. Pressed in men's cloth ing, she performs every duty that she might expect of the hired men, and noth ing is too dUflcult or tiresome for her. Thousands of persons have come to see the "girl farmer of Lapeer county" at work. Blender and graceful, her outdoor life tiaa given to her a handsome form and beauty. With blue Jean overalls drawn tightly about her waist, a "sun hat," fight ing to hold down her tumbling gulden brown hair, and with brown eyes looking out from under it, Miss Stratton is per haps the prettiest farmer in existence. ' With the three mowing machines during haying season she is always in - the lead, and when she stops to get a drink or rest her horses the machines of the others stop also. If she rakos a ten-acre field of hay and Is tired enough to quit she sig nals the others to stop also, and when pitching hay Into the barns or upon the stacks si takes turn for turn. Plowing, dragging or hoeing, sawing wood or build ing fences. Miss Stratton sets the paoo. Kven during threshing she stacks straw or pitches bundles, while other women get the dinner for the threshers'. ' During these months Michigan's girl farmer Is at the height of her glory. The farm la buzzing with life and there Is work One Million Dollars Have Been Spent to Give Liquozone Free to the Sick We have bought a 50c bottle of Liquozone and giren it free to each of 1,800,000 sick ones. And we have spent over $1,000,000, in one yenr, to announce and fulfill this offer. May we buy you a bottle, to show you the wonderful product which warrants an offer like that? arid the Misses Bell were graduated from doeB her mlmng business wit' her neigh- from dawn until dusk' whlle ner 'fiends the Washington1 High school, She Sleeps Oat of Doors. Tucked snugly away In an eiderdown bag, fanned by the chill winds of Lake Michigan, caressed by thei moonbeams and winked at by the stars, a little woman out In Evana ton sleeps every night out of ' doors, says the Chicago Journal. She la Mrs. Martha Foote Crowe, dean of women at Northwest . ern university and head of Wlllard Hall at that institution. "I am no convert to outdoor living," said Mrs. Crowe, "because I have always been a believer In It Why should not one i.leep out of doors In Kvanston as well as when one canujis out west?" "My sleeping bag? It Is' not extraordi nary. 'it Is of denim lined with an etder down quilt. It is really a bed that folds around ths sleeper. There is a head cover ing that will protect the eyes of the late sleeper from the morning sun. ' "I have spent the summer In the upper Sierras. Up in the Sierras the air Is always dry. Consequently everyone In camp sleeps out of doors, right on the ground. You simply put on your sleeping bog anrt He down. If you would sleep in tho morning after the sun has risen you protect your eyes by the flap that comes over your head." "Here Is the porch my sleeping place," she said as she came out on the broad veranda, "and I assure you it Is delightful. Afraid of porch climbers? Why, no. A vet eran of the Sierras should be fearlee In Kvanston. "Everyone In California sleeps outdoors as much as he can. Sleeping bags are com mon articles of trade. ' "Shall I do It In cold weather? An alti tude of IQ,0UO feet In the Sierras brings cold weather. And I sleep there. But my bug bors, but to others she Is kown as the are Planning automobile and yachting pat- Glrl Miller of the Perklomen. ties she is laying pians lor me cmuvauon Although Miss Trelchler Is so young, she of crl- Soores ot 'notations come (to has already a milling experience of two h", but she always sends a brief note back veam. hesldxa th majiv vpiuh aha rnr Baying: "This U a busy Season on the Before we bonglit the rls;bU to IJquo- sone, we tented It for two years, through physicians and hospitals, la this country and others. We proved It In nil kinds of germ diseases In thousands of the most difficult raa- obtainable. Ana we cured with It nearly every disease winch was considered Incurable. We knew then that the product was of vital worth to humanity. We knew that everywhere there was sickness which Ldauozone alone could cure, and suffering which nothing but Liquozone could stop. We knew that thousands died daily whom Liquozone could save. But what was the best way to quickly let the sick ones know It? How could we get this heln to them at once? How could we best convince them that IJquo- eone did what medicine never could do? We decided to buy the first bottle and give It free to every sick one we learned of. We would let the product Itself prove Its power. So we published this offer, again and again, In nearly every newspaper In America. The result is that millions usj Liquo- rone now. Your own neighbors, wher ever you are. can tell you about it. And half the people one meets, in Tiny part of America, know some one whom Liquozone has cured. What Liquozone Is Liquozone Is not a medicine. It Is not made by compounding acids or drugs, nor Is there any alcohol in It. Its virtues are derived solely from gns largely oxygen gas by a process re quiring immense apparatus aud 14 days' time. Each cubic inch of Liquozone requires the use of l,2.r0 cubic luche9 of gas. Liquozone Is the result pf a process, which, for more than 20 years, has been the constant subject of scientific and chemical .research. The main result is to get into a liquid, and thus Into the I blood, a powerful, yet harmless, germl clde. Another result is to create a vital izing tonic with which no other known product can compare. Kills Inside Germs The great value of Liquozone lies in the fact that it does what oxygen does. Oxygen Is the vital part of air, the very source of vitality, the most essen nal element of life. It Is the blood food, the nerve food, the scavenger of the blood. It Is oxygen that turns the blue blood to red Id the lungs; that ellni mates the waste tissue and builds up the new. Too little oxygen always causes lack of vitality. An excess of it gives strength to every function of isature. Oxygen Is also a germicide. The rea son Is that germs are vegetables; and an excess of oxygen the very life of an animal Is deadly to vegetal matter. Liquozone acts like oxygen. But it does more than oxygen, because It Is stable. It carries its virtues into the blood to go wherever the blood goes. It Is n remarkable tonic the best thing in the world for you.' Yet It Is a germi cide so certain that we publish on every bottle an offer of $l.noo for a, disease germ that It cannot kill. The discoverer of Liquozone has solved the great problem of killing germs In the body without killing the tissues, too. And there Is no other way. Any drug that kills germs Is a poison. and It cannot be taken Internally. Li quozone Is the only way that any man knows to end the cause of . any germ disease. Nine Nations Now use Liquozone. The product Is more widely employed than any medi cine ever was; more widely prescribed by the better physicians. And no one can doubt that it is doing more for sick humanity that all tbe drugs In use com bl ned. We paid $10(1,000 for the American rights to Liquozone; and the British rights sold for a similar sum. Those are the highest prices ever paid for similar rlchts on any scientific (lis covery. We tell you this fuct because it Illustrates the value or liquozone. A product whose rights can bring a price like that must have very great merit must be of very great worth to humanity. Germ Diseases These are the known germ disease- all due to perms, or the poisons which genus create. These are the diseases to which medicine does not apply, for drugs cannot kill Inside germs. All that medicine can do for these troubles Is to act aa a tonic, aiding Na ture to overcome the germs. But those results are indirect and uncertain. They depend on the patient's condition. When drugs were prescribed for these trou- nies. nobody knew of germs. Jow every good physician knows that they call for a germicide. Liquozone alone can destroy the cause of these troubles. It goes wherever the blood goes. No germ can escape It, and we have found no disease germ which can resist it. Diseases which have re sisted medicine for years yield at once to Liquozone, and It cures diseases which medicine never cures. In any stage of any dlsensft in this list, the results are so certain that we will gladly send to any patient who asks it an ab solute guarantee. Asthma A bceee Anaemia Bronchitis Blood Poison Brlght't DIlHS Bowel Troubles Cougha Colds Consumption Coll Croup Conattpation Catarrh Canrer Dysentery Diarrhoea H7 Parer Infiuens Kidney Diseases LaOrlppe Leucorrhoea Liver Trouble Malaria Neuralgia Many Heart Troublea PI lea Pneumonia Pleurley Quinsy Rheumatism Scrofula Syphilis Skin Dl Stontaen Trohla Throat Trmibka Tuberrulrmli Tumors llier Vartr.! Women's rMeeanea II Innaramatlnaj II the results Panrtrut? Dropay Prapepaia E'-seme Rryalpelas rerera iall rttone Coltre iout Gonorrhea Gleet All flseaae, that he(1a with fee. an ratarrn all ennlat-lnua dli of lanrure or rniann.4 hlnod In nervous drMiMr Mquotone -ta aa a vita 11 see, aocompllahlni what no Jru can do. First Bottle Pree If you need Llquoaone, and have never used it, please send us the coupon below. We will then send you an order on a local druggist for a full-sized bottle a 50c bottle and will pay the drug gist ourselves for it. This applies only to the first bottle, of course to those) who have never used It. The acceptance of this offer place you under no obligations. We simply wish to convince you; to"Vt the product itself show you what.it can do. Then you can Judge by results as to whether you wish to continue. This offer Itself should convince von that Liquozone does as we claim. We would certainly not buy a bottle and give it to you If there was anv doubt of results. You want these results; yon want to be well and to keep well. Then bo fair enough to yourself to accept our offer today. Let us show you, at our expense, what this wonderful prod uct means to yon. ; Liquozone costs 50c and $1. CUT OUT THIS COUPON for thla offer may not appear attain. Pill nnt the blanka and mall It to the Liquid Ozona Co. 4M-464 Wabaah A vs., Cblcafo. My dlaease la I have never tried Llqtiorone, but If you will supply ma a 60a bottle (roe, 1 will take It. Give full address writs plainly. Any physician or hospital not yet ualna Llauosoae rill be flail ly supplied lor a test. farm." "I don't understand why any girl In her right mind could help liking this, she says. "We've got at least 330 live things on the farm and every bit ot their love around tbe mill hopper In her girlhood days. The art of milling she began fjo learn soon after she was 12, when, under the appren ticeship of her father, she had learned to keep the mill in clean condition. Miss Trelchler was born on a farm at goes to one girl." Hereford, Just a few hundred yards away For a long time the overalls bothered from where the mill stands She la her own Miss Stratton. People would stare at her. master, makes her own rules, transacts her and then she had to have overalls made own business affairs, attends to her own to order, correspondence and keeps her own books. "But I cant' help from wearing them," It Is only on rare occasions that the girl she explained. "If I didn't my skirt would miller has assistance when a extra large get caught in the mower and binder chains load of rye arrives or a heavy shipment of and I would have trouble in everything I flour is to be made and the only to ex- attempted to do. And," she added. pedlte affairs. She la no Hercules, neither believe my trousers have brought me ai- has sho the strength of an atalete, but she most all ot the notoriety I have." is strong and muscular. She Is a little be- $ low the average height of women and Covering Traces of Age weighs about 140 pounds, a,d is strong "Seventy-five per cent of the women dye enough. to hnndlo a three-buiihel sack of their hair," Is the statement made by a hair rye or a barrel of flour, for sho has leurned dresser In the New York Sun. And the reo. the art of moving them with ttie least exer- son she gives to account for the practice tion. a curious one, When she wishes to raise the huge grind- "Young blood Is wanted today In business lug stones, which weigh nearly a ton, she and gray hairs are fatal to success," said lifts them with the aid of serein- pins to the she. "If you don't believe it Just let a required height with the greatest of ease. When she dresses the atones she handles the five-pound mill picks several hours In succession without the slightest fatigue. Miss Trelchler has fair hair and complexion,- which typifies the Pennsylvania German race. Her eyes are brown. She has the reputation of being able to estimate the yield of a thirty-acre flald when the grain la in the head aa closely as any woman of your acquaintance whose hair has begun to turn try to get a position. "Her face may be young and her ambl tlon equal to that of her more youthful sisters, but, nevertheless, youth and inex perience, in nine cases out of ten, will win rather than experience and gray hairs. "I saw the force of this argument Inst week. A woman friend of mlno who, though not more than 28, yet has hair nearly white, waa suddenly thrown upon farmer can. When market quotations are la not waternroof and I couldn't do it in discussed her word is accepted without her own resources. She possessed many damn weather " question. qualifications for business, but somehow no a Although being eager to attend to her one wanted her. She came to me one day Anthor'a Daughter Sluice. milling business, she finds time for pleas- and told her troubles, Miss Ethel Bret Harte, tl.d daughter of ure. While her recreations ate varied, her " 'Dye your hair,' was the advice I gave the famous writer of early California life, chief delight Is rowing on the waters from which she derives the power to run her mill. Another favorite pastime is driving a pair of high-stepping horses. In winter she finds delight on the Ice In skating. The output of her mill, when water is has decided to devote herself to concert work. Although Bret Harte made large profits from his writings and won a suc cess which seldom comes to a writer as early as It did to him. he left his family In very straitened circumstances, and If it plenty, averages S.000 pounds daily, and is were not for the many staunch friends in sold to the leading cities in the east and the American colony In London Mrs. Bret eventually finds It way to the shops of the Hurts would often find It difficult to make German bakers. Those bakers assert that both ends meet. With her children she has no rye flour is equal in quality to that made her home. In Bayawater, ever slnca ground between stones and these keep the Bret Harte's death. The family difficulties product of the mill at a premium. have been complicated by threatened loss of sight of one of the sons and ho has been sent to Bwltserland In the hope that a re nowned oooullat may perform a succeful operation. , Miss Bret Harte has had a long aphill her. "She was quite shocked at such a sugges tlon, but finally decided to try It. Tho following duy she sallied forth and before the forenoon was over came back to me Jubilant and successful." " g' Wesita la Machine Shops. In this country of machine-made goods the discussions that have been going on ia the English press as to the desirability, or rcthcr, undesirablllty, of women engaging struggle in her work. Bhe served a stage in home work In the lighter Iron Industries. apprenticeship with Qeorgs Kdwards and such as flle-cuttlng, chain-making and even TtM OFT si mm ? H. ',l,"ll L Sweet memories come back to her and occo I Ghocolaxea Make theui sweeter. Those soft and creamy coasters are Grandma's delicltt Dainty bpkes delicate flavors. Facked and sealed in our ipotleM cundy factory. t Sold Everywhere in iOc, 30c and 60c Boxes Omaha Candy Co. 'if 'i,la t,-V.i 91 'Li. t ' I i in II lii II w Leaves from Fashion's Notebook. Ciiiunuls is n favorite in the soft tints. One of the newest shades' is crushed cranberry. A handsome girdle of celery green velvet Is caught under a green gold cluap, into which are set masses of green stones, mak ing one shining stomacher of green. IJttle girls' gowna of voile and canvaa are mure than ever popular. In ligut browns, blues and reds they are pretty uud appropriate for home wuur, although hardly durable enough for school. Chiffon velvet will undoubtedly be the favorite material for velvet gowna. It dues not crush easily, and Ih so pliable t,hut It lends Itself readily to present modes. The surface of this lubrlc la extremely lustrous una beautiful. ; One of the beaver hats In pale violet Is turban-t'hsped. The trimming Is a cluster of grapes exactly the shade jf the beaver, and darkening ever so lutio in places. The foliate is velvet in ex quisite shades of green and gold. With all the new gowns there go girdles of various kinds. And with many there are half a dozen. Thene girdles are in differ ent colors to match the embroidery, ine sue or the Jewels. And they are made of chiffon, velvet, satin, slik and suede. Wide hats, especially those of long nap Deaver, retain meir vogue lor giria. a lit tle license is allowed in the children's ham, and they may be trimmed as much as t-ood taste termite. The Gainsborough or picture hat looks its best over young faces nd floating hair. The most satisfactory school gowns for t;lrla up to 16 years are sailor auita, known us regulation naval aulla. r'or small girls Hie kkirle of these are kilted in the usual nanner. Tho suits for old or girlB have iilp yokes, laced in the back with broad o.ack atlk laces. From this yoke the skirls are kilted. Along with the craze for beads Is a vogue for what la called pebble Jewelry, that i, vml-preclous. stones in artistic gold or sW . vr setting. Topus. turuuuiae, opal and the matrlcea ot the last two atones, Jucie. Larnellan, lapla and other atones chosen lor their color rather than their brilliance) are ueed largely for the new Jowelry. Fortunea are spent in New York by vomen of wealth In the decoration of their rawing rooms, and this by no means in- ludes all the furnishings, but Junt the loor coverings and nail decorations. One rer beautiful drawing room In Iul XVI .tyle was done by a Fifth avenue dm-or.nor at a coat of Sl2,000. Curnegle'a drawing room coat $li.). while C. M. Suhwub'a, It a Bald, will cost nearer tao.OuO. A large manufacturer of fine shoes hands ut.aoine timely Information for the care jf wet tlioei. He advlaea: "Don't dry your wet shoes too quickly don't put them under the stove or on the radiator. Although you cannot see It, It will surely rot the leather. Let them dry slowly. Shoes also require rest. Have at least two pairs st the same time. Let the pair you are not wearing stay on trees and each pair of shoes will lost you twice as long." Chat Abont Women. Mrs. William B. Kinney, daughter of Governor Franklin Murphy of New Jersey, will christen the battleahip New Jersey, at the launching on November 10. Mrs. Henrietta E. V. Stannard. the Eng lish novelist, more widely knewn as "John Strange Winter," is the lateBt recruit to Christian Science from among the lesser notabilities of English society. Hazel Harrison, un 18-year-old American colored girl, the first negro artist who has ever appeared In Germany, made a suc cessful debut as a piano soloist with the Philharmonic orchestra In Berlin recently. She is a native of Laporte, ina. Rev. Dr. Anna Shaw told a lecture audience the other evening that for a long time women's stature had been increasing, while that of men has shown an opposite tendency. Dr. Shaw expresses the belief that the physical deterioration ot men is traceable to their indulgence 4n tobacco and liquor. The wife of Admiral Urtu la a Vassar girl and on her return to the east after her graduation the Japanese government expressed its appreciation of the many courtesies shown by presenting the college a pair of magnificent Japanese vases. They stand two feet high and are of bronze, ornamented with delicate flowers of beaten gold. Women wearing uniforms are to be In stalled in one of the new hotels of New York to act as bell boys and to attend solely to the wants of women guests who arrive alone. It is done to obviate embar rassment on the part of women who are unaccustomed to going alone to hotels and do not care to be ushered to their , rooms by the regulation bell boys. Miss Isabel Hagner, private secretary to Mrs. Roosevelt, has a fortune ample for all the frivolities of Newport and Tuxedo or for division of her life between Fifth ave nue and Belgrave square, but she prefers to follow the useful career ahe mapped out for herself when, with a thinner puree, she entered semi-public life. When Miss Hagner came Into a handsome Inheritance recently she gave no sign of intention to leave her present post. young California millionaire. Is an omnlver- , ous readei and pernlstently turns a deaf ear ! to social demands that Interfere with her ; daily period ot devotion to books. She Is an ideal hostess and a merry guest, but I read she will so many hours in every twen- . ty-four, and all her arrangements are framed to fit that requirement. The young matron nevertheless finds plenty of time for other pleasures, becauwe he eoonomizes the moments most women waste. j Queen Helena of Italy, who recently gave ' birth to a son, Is 81 years old, having been born on January 8, 1873, the third of seven daughters of Prince Nickolas, lord of the Black mountain kingdom of Montenegro. One writer says: "She came down from J the mountains with all her native fresh ness ollnglnif to her, a striking fiiiure, six I feet tall, with dark hair and eyes, but with a complexion of scarlet." Victor Em manuel was two years wooing her. Vpon the birth of their first child the queen gave a cradle or $20 In money to every babe born that day In Rome or Naples. Essentially a womanly woman, the queen is -rliars the most attractive royal per sonage of the day, and certainly she Is the most beloved and admired woman in . the kingdom of Italy. f ff o clothe him with a luit that will keep him dry IfiX yf ,' ' I in all aorta of weather, poaaenet vle and it mads Ft&rteM- potictiet itvle and it made for service. Our new (patent applied for) $3.00 Htrcults Suit it of the famoui Wtar Resisting una wptnaaou Rainproof, Stralnproqf, Hygienic and Sanitary .$5 :''5 IV . popular prices. II yourt hain t them, write to ui direct Strictly all wool, choekfull of ityle, as are all garmenti of the d&nfrrefrmiti and will out wear two ordinary suits. Consist! of double-.' breasted coat and knee pants (linen lined.) C C Nothing Like It Ever Offered For The Prices Adapted for Bey of 7 U 16 years.. Plenty of snappy, chic styles for little fel- lows' wear described and beautifully illustrated (in colors) in our entertaining FREE booklet entitled "A Son'i Letters to his Mother." Youri for the asking and really worth writ ing for. s222S& clothes for boys of all ages are sold by better class clothiers, at Daadiufi Is a contagious disease caused by a microbe. GOING-l GOING!! GONE 111 IC1DE WILL KEHPi Dr. CHARLES THE GREAT 'BEAUTIFIEk kas beeo m by leading aatrsaeae ana etkara lie know Uie Talus of a beautiful oarapleiloa ana rounded din re. It will positively do aa we llaltn, PRODUCa HEALTHY FLESH an the tace, aeok and anna, suing all hollow place, adding graoe, ourre and beauty. It la post llToly the only preparation In the world that elll DEVELOP THE BUST aad kep the breast Inn, full and ymaietrtcai. it baa neeer fallea la aocompllsB this result, not euly for the so slety lady, the aotreaa sad the maiden, but tot Ik mother so unfortunat aa to'loee bar aaA sra! boaom through nuralng. WRINKLES about tbe mouth, aye and thoae ef the forehead dlaappear aa by magio, leaving skin teitur firm aad olear. FACIAL SAOOJNO. the great beauty destroyer af middle life, ia also eorreeted by thla Flesh Pood. On sale at all Department Star and Dni agist. Oar following liberal offer puts It within tke SPBCIALOPPERi riFE-Oa tat aad look, faaob of ersry puree. Th regular prion of Dr. Charles' Flreh Food la on dollar a box, but it roe will send us 1 w will eend you two (I) Vaxen In plain wrmiper, alao our book, "A-eVP OF ktASSAoa," illustrated with all tke aor rest morementa for msaasglng the taaa, seek, arms and brut, a .4 cemtaintg valuable kbita aa kealtk and kassty. Pln Ckaplotl. tke eaU etraoed lYenck siasrar, asyi 1 tkla boolsi "It la tke mart oempleU I ksrs ores- aeeav vary we man ahamld kara saw aa4 asaaait M dally." Wrtta waaxy. Br. C arles Co.. OS Fslleg St, New York City."., f. ..aid- NEW WRINKLE CURE Valuable Discovery by a California Physician Removes WrinKlea While You .Sleep. Trial Box Free I have a ramelv that will aneedlly eradicate any rasa ot wrinkle on earth and restore a flabby or withered akin back to th firm, smooth texture of youth. Just a you used to look when In your prime. Thla I no humbug, but a plain statement of fact. I am no "beauty doctor," but a rex ular physician: my reference are among tlie beat citizens of thla State. Ilho remedy I ex actly a represented; there la nothing like It It ha never failed yet. It 1 th tru "Secre. of Tfouth." Don't buy until you try It. A fro aample, euftVlent to how what tV remedy will do, will be sent, plain aeulel, tr any man or woman for to postage. Add res. WORTH. NGTON FORDYCE, RI.D. LOS ANGELES, CAL. A BKIN OP BRAtrrY H A JOY FOREVER DR. T. FELIX OOl'UAl D' ORIKNTAL CKEAkl.OU MAGICAL, BEAUTIFIXH i Q KemoTea Tan, rimple.Frrktea, 5 2 ,f3? Moth I'atukea, Ka.li. and Skin due, aud every bleiulak r 3-3 V'lf'yra fjleflea detection. It 5 ! f f-?! , H ffSyiha atood tke test r TV? f lof 66 yeara, and l WS'tS fff X. J' harmless w ft f VJ J t i tuU 11 to b sure it ta properly made. Accept uo couuur. felt ef aim liar nam. Ir. L. A. suyr aid to a lu,ly of Uie taut. ladle them, I m a fiewaud'i Cr' th laaat harmful ot all tbe ckla premratlona or aula by all Iniguis and Faaty Good theaters JAVETT HERPICIDE WILL WE IT TOO LATE FORHERriCTOH I' f L V U A be. a- I tnsin were ds.meu,y .so. i..,i... ., A- ra a a naaaSW 1 n.. Im Imnnkl. Ki.t Itm fnprnnn.i. Aar.A. The mere mention of "hair remedy" i ruff, ltchln scalp and hsir can throws some men into a nt of un- I be cured by stopping the mlcroble growth reasonable incredulity. It is true that with Newbro'a fferplelde. It prevents re before the microblo origin of baldness I infection. Money back if unsatisfactory, was discovered that most hair reme- 1 Delightful hair dreaalng. Stops itching of dies were worthies, but not many of I the acalp Instantly. Druf Smr.s, Si. 00. Si ad 10c Stamps to BtHKlDE CO., 0 pt. H. Detroit, Mich, tor a ssmp'e. NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE THE ORIGINAL remedy that "kills the Dandruff Germ." SHERMAN & McCONNELL DRUG CO.. Special Ajrents. APPLICATIONS AT PROMINENT BARBER SHOPS. I THE XXTH CENTURY SEWING MACHINE"! iULlEiLNl Han tOQ (ft aUlellUt W1U 1 FlRO. T. iiOHUtik, fiser, 7 treat Jean Su, L L SEVEN GHAHD PRIZES (Highest Awards Obtainable) BY THE INTERNATIONAL JURY AT ST. LOUIS, TO THE SINGER MANUFACTURING CO. Fcr FAMILY SEWING MACHINES 1 Especially for "No. 66" absolutely tbe lightest running- lock stitch machine in the world. For Embroideries, Laces and Tapestries made on Singer Sewing Machines for family use. For Gre&test Progress and Most Recent Improvements in sewing machines for manufacturing' purposes. Two Hundred Different Sewing Machines shown in Operation for Every Stitching Process. The 'Best of Everything THE ONLY DOUBLE-TRACK RAILWAY BETWEEN TKE MISSOURI RIVER AND CHICAGO .Number 12, The Daylight Special now carries elegant Parlor Car ser vice, leaving Omaha 7,10 every morning, arrive ing at Chicago 8 o'clock p. m., Dining Car serv ing all meals. it. Tloket Offloei 14011403 FARNAM TRCCT. OMAHA. Taleekeeee S4-Sei. J) Vgvn1 nwm -nvw it xt7vi,iweeeeeV BAKERBROS ENGRAVING OP. iliilf